I will be helping a friend with their website, which is hosted by Csolve (Compu-solve). Their website only gives hosting options, with no FAQ’s, etc to tell the address to go log in to a website. I emailed them through their contact page a couple days ago, but no response yet. If anyone has a site hosted through them, could you please tell me where to sign in? Also, do they support FrontPage?
Thanks!
Posts Tagged ‘Where’
Where To Sign In For Csolve Web Hosting?
January 24th, 2010Is There A Web Hosting Site Where You Can Upload More Than 10 Mins?
January 23rd, 2010Youtube doesn’t allow longer than 10.
Any suggestions?
Where Can I Purchase A Domain Name And How Do I Have People Redirected From That Domain Name To Another Site?
January 23rd, 2010I currently have a website, but I am not happy with the domain name. How can i buy a new name and have people using the new name directed to the current site?
Where Can I Find Absolutely Free Web Hosting No Ads And Pop Ups.?
January 22nd, 2010almost of the web hosting provider has downtime experience and sometime if they are in the time of maintenance no such any email what the exactly happening in our hosting?
huh!!!!
Where can i find Absolutely Free Web Hosting No Ads and Pop ups.?
Where Can You Get A Free Domain Name?
January 21st, 2010I purchased WebEasy7 website hosting software. I downloaded it onto my computer and how do you regitster your website for it… Which leads to the question, where can I get a free domain name?
Where Are All The Internet Domain Names Registered? Is There One Central Place?
January 19th, 2010There is no one central place for name registrations – there are several. Network Solutions is one, Go-Daddy is another. These are only two examples, but are probably the two largest registrars.
Once the name is registered, it must be resolved via DNS (Distributed Name Services). Here again, someone must host your name. And again, the above two companies will do it for you, or your service provider can.
For DNS, there is – in effect – one central place – because the top level domains (like .com, .biz, .org) each have a “well known” fixed IP address where to start. These are usually served by multiple computers residing at one address (load sharing), but as far as your system is concerned, it only needs to know how to get to the root to start the search.
In practice, your computer does not start with the root ro resolve a name – instead it goes to your internet service provider’s DNS server. These ISP DNS servers will cache many popular name / address translations – and then will go to the root servers only as required to resolve a new name, or every so often to verify a cached name. In this way, the root servers are not overloaded as each query comes along.

